Very good book. Sometimes felt repetitive and not as logically ordered or separated as it could be, but nonetheless a very interesting and thought-proVery good book. Sometimes felt repetitive and not as logically ordered or separated as it could be, but nonetheless a very interesting and thought-provoking look at the treatment of women in the British courts. The case law really brought it alive too. Some parts are quite out of date - for example the changes mentioned to the defences to murder have now been enacted - but as the book was written in 1992 this in inevitable. A recommended read for any woman involved in the law (or aspiring to be so) as a professional....more